One character, a teen-aged girl named Alix, was inspired by a real person Ching interviewed: Jennifer Friend. Back in the 1980s, Friend and her three siblings grew up with both parents. But her father, a tech entrepreneur, and her mother, a pre-school teacher, lived in financially precarious circumstances. Often, a rent-by-the-week motel was the best they could do. Sometimes, the family simply slept at friends’ houses until other arrangements could be made.

She called the problem “the homelessness that isn't seen.” Homeless kids don’t typically live under bridges or beg on the street, but the transience of their lives makes schooling and everything else harder. Even those lucky enough to sometimes live in motels, as Friend did, have to contend with challenges like having zero privacy.

“There are 1.3 million homeless children in America's public-school system that are living in motels, shelters [or] cars, or couch-surfing, which means that each night they sleep on a different person's couch,” said Friend.

Project Hope, based in Orange County, provides services to such families.

“Project Hope Alliance specifically eliminates the barriers and fills in the gaps caused by homelessness for our kids,” said Friend. “So we actually have site-based programs where we have full-time intensive case managers on public-school sites to resource out the needs of the homeless children and youth all the way to age 24.

“So just by getting our kids to graduate from high school we're reducing the chance that they'll be homeless by almost 400 percent. But we're also introducing possibility into their lives. We're making sure that if they play an instrument they have an instrument to play, that if they want to compete in Model United Nations that they have the money to go and compete.”

Friend hopes that Nomad Motel will help raise awareness. The work was initially inspired when playwright Ching saw the documentary The Motel Kids of Orange County. The film led her to the Project Hope Alliance and to Friend. While working on the play, Ching interviewed Friend extensively. Friend says it was the first time she had shared her story at length. That helped dispel the shame she felt about her experience.

“One of the things I love so much about Nomad Motel is that Carla has done such a beautiful job in creating a story of possibility, strength and hope, that it allows for the audience to understand and empathize with our kids, but also know that that this is only one chapter in their story,” she said. “It's not the whole story.”

Nomad Motel has a cast of five, directed by Bart DeLorenzo. It’s produced at City Theatre as part of a National New Play Network Rolling World Premiere, in partnership with Horizon Theater in Atlanta, and Unicorn Theatre in Kansas City, Mo., where it will be staged after City Theatre’s run end.

As legend goes, an old man fills up the leaky moon each night with liquid light. But what if, someday, he didn't? A home-grown theater company of Carnegie Mellon University grads considers what would happen, as 90.5 WESA's Katie Blackley reports.

Each night, an old man that lives on a cliff fills up the moon with liquid light. He and his wife have been doing the same routine for so long, they’ve forgotten who they are and why they started filling up the moon in the first place.